Sunday, December 20, 2009

Rain IS a blessing:

The following story can be found here. During this season at the Hope For Israel Relief Fund we hope that you will find it in your heart to be a blessing to all of those who are around you, strangers and friends alike. The LORD has given us so much, please consider giving back to his people and blessing the people of Israel today!

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Typical day: woke up around 7am when the sun finally warmed my room, thanked Hashem in that split second between being fully awake and still floating softly in my world of dreams, put my toes into yummy slippers, headed to the bathroom, wandered groggily into the kitchen, made delicious turkish coffee from the arab shuk.. then sat, surrounded by books and mountains, just breathing and reflecting. The day always hits once the coffee is mostly gone..

I made my way to Jerusalem sometime in the afternoon, driving along winding roads that were empty.. Clouds had gathered, turning the sky to a heavy grey. There is something about clouds in the desert.. something about the sky feeling so much closer and present. Tangible.. By the time I had entered Jerusalem, the clouds had simply melded together above darkened buildings and trees that looked helpless in the wind. I kept looking at people’s faces as i drove by.. No one was smiling. I thought to myself, why is it so hard for them to remember that rain is a blessing? Where was the joy?

Time passed and by chance, my appointment was canceled. I sat in my car slightly annoyed and wondered where to go.. feeling somehow part of the storm and yet oddly detached. I felt safe from my life, from the world, enclosed in my little bubble of metal, leather and padding.. listening to Dezarie while blasting heat in my face. Deeply wishing I had something to do.

As I stared listlessly out of the car window lacking all motivation, my eye caught site of an old woman making her way slowly up the street. She was using a walker, stumbling along as if she were fighting the wind and her own body at the same time.. My heart froze. I didn’t know what to do, so I decided to watch and wait. She leaned heavily against the parked cars as she tried walking up the hill. Her eyes were covered by dark sunglasses that hid her face, and again I hesitated, simply not knowing how to act.

A moment later she was beside my car and I saw the deep, fine lines in her face, the struggle to stay composed in spite of her weakness, the fierce pride in her posture, and the desire to live. My heart overcame my anxiety and I hopped out of the car rushing over to her with a smile, praying that I would not embarrass her! She stood still in shock, struggling to hear me over the wind.

“Hi!” I said in the most casual, friendly voice I could muster while shivering in the cold. “Can I help you? Where do you need to go, I will give you a ride.”

“WHAT?!” she replied, taken aback.. I flushed with embarrassment and somehow managed to repeat my offer, this time gesturing to my car and the heat emanating from the open door. Finally she looked at me and said while shaking her head in frustration, “I have to go to the pharmacy today but my leg is not doing well in this cold.”

“Please let me take you” I said to her with a warm smile. “I will take you there and bring you home when you are done.”

“You will wait for me?” she said in disbelief. “GOD BLESS YOU! You are my angel today!” She started to hobble over to my car, mumbling about how it was a miracle from Hashem that I had come. “This is my lucky day!” she said again and again. I helped her in, then drove to the pharmacy while trying to make amicable conversation. Her English was perfect.. I found out that her husband had died, that she had been living in Israel for 24 years, that now there was no one left.. that she was alone.

She told me she had lived all over the world, from europe to the U.S.. and in one quick breath, she told me that she had survived the holocaust. My knuckles tightened on the wheel. We pulled up to the pharmacy before we could speak any further and I helped her in. She could barely move her leg.. I don’t know how she had planned on making it to the pharmacy by walking. With a toughness borne from years of survivial, she said “I don’t like missing a day taking my medicine, so I had to go.” I wondered in my heart how the elderly of Jerusalem managed to get their medicine..

After she bought the medication, I helped her back into the car and drove her to her home, offering to carry her bag for her. Embarrassment crept into her face and I quickly added that I would only walk her to the door. My heart dropped yet again as I saw that she lived on the second floor and had to walk up 20 stairs. I couldn’t understand.. my mind wouldn’t let me understand or how else could I go on living knowing that this was reality?

It took us five minutes to climb the stairs, yet we made it and stood facing each other in front of her door. She reached out steadily and took my hand in a firm handshake.

“My name is Sarah” she said with a deep strength that was heartbreaking.

“My name is Talya” I replied, looking into her dark sunglasses.

She thanked me and blessed me, that all the good things in my heart should come to fruition. Then I thanked her, from the bottom of my heart, for having had the honor of meeting and helping her. I walked away with the hairs of my arm standing on end, feeling so helpless and yet so blessed that I had tears in my eyes. I pondered what to do next.. pondered all the elderly who struggle daily with both their emotional and physical pain.. I pondered how many elderly in the streets I could have helped if I had looked outside of myself and paid attention.

Perhaps this friday I will bring her flowers and leave them outside her door with a note. Maybe I will get lucky and take her to the pharmacy again.

And to think, all this because I had asked for something to do. Jerusalem is a powerful city if we open ourselves to it.

I hope Sarah is doing well…

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Anti-Israel is the new anti-Semitism

The following article appeared in the Jerusalem Post's online publication's on December 16, 2009. It was written by the Jerusalem Post Staff Writers and reprinted below in its entirety.

Anti-Semitism is a very real threat faced by Jews all over the world. Earlier this week a group of radical Christians tore town a Hanukah display in Moldova at the bequest of an Orthodox Priest declaring "We are an Orthodox country. Stephan the Great defended our country from all kinds of kikes, and now they come and put their menorah here. This is anarchy," as the demonstrators tore down the display. All over the world there is unspeakable hatred, indeed even in Israel there is a level of anti-Semitism to be found.

The Hope For Israel Relief Fund stands with Israel always. Helping the poor and disenfranchised in a multitude of ways. Wherever there are those whom the world rallies against, be they poor, be they Jewish, be they fatherless, motherless, and without hope, we stand with them. The Hope For Israel Relief Fund seeks to show the people of Israel that the world does care about them, and that they are worth defending, not just from the anti-Semitism of the world, but also from those that would turn their backs and put the poor and the hurt out of mind and out of sight. If you want to see the most vulnerable of Israel taken care of please consider contributing to our efforts today, you can make a difference. You can provide Hope.

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Anti-Semitism is being used to delegitimize the State of Israel, Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman said Wednesday.

Speaking at the Foreign Ministry's third annual Global Forum for Combating Anti-Semitism, Lieberman said "classic anti-Semitism, along with Iranian funding and Islamic anti-Semitism, is being used to incite hatred against Jews, and to delegitimize theState of Israel."

He said that global anti-Semitism had "crossed the line," and that those behind the effort were "seeking to destroy the Jewish state piece by piece... using academic boycotts and economic sanctions." He also noted "human rights groups' effort to deny Israel legitimacy by pushing the United Nations Security Council to adopt the Goldstone Report," which accused Israel of war crimes and possible crimes against humanity during Operation Cast Lead in the Gaza Strip.

"Modern anti-Semitism," the foreign minister asserted, "has taken on the form of being anti-Israel... Instead of saying 'throw the Jews into the sea,' they talk of a world without Zionism, and without Israel."

Referring to the matter of Iran, Lieberman said, "It's scary that 60 years after the horrors of the Holocaust, we see examples of anti-Semitism being funded by Iran." He added that the Islamic republic "denies the Holocaust, calls for the destruction of Israel, and is trying to achieve nuclear capability. These efforts remind us of [the Nazis' rise to power] 70 years ago."

According to the registration list, over 500 participants plan to attend the two-day conference at Jerusalem's Crowne Plaza Hotel. Delegations comprising diplomats, academics, and policy makers from the United States, Germany, France, Hungary, Ukraine, the United Kingdom, Turkey, Venezuela and Argentina were listed on the GFCA roster.

Also speaking at the conference on Wednesday was Diaspora Affairs Minister Yuli Edelstein, who cited anti-Semitic attacks around the world in the past year, noting that they took place "in 2009, not 1937."

He too spoke of a change in the nature of anti-Semitism: "No longer permissible to openly proclaim hatred of the Jews? So the anti-Semite must seek new forms and forums to release his poison."

"No longer politically correct to openly hate Jews? So he has repackaged his hate, and in doing so has been able to gain endorsement from academics, media outlets, and even political parties."

Edelstein went on to tell delegates that Israel had become the focus of global anti-Semitism, saying, "There are no more Jews. Instead there are Israelis. Israeli soldiers kill babies. Israeli soldiers attack pregnant mothers. Israelis started wars in Iraq and Afghanistan."

During his travels abroad, the minister said, he often heard people expressing support for the creation of a Palestinian state, as well as the removal of theJewish state, which they called "inherently racist." In response to such sentiments, Edelstein said, "I do not know if a more contradictory, irrational, and illogical argument have ever been made in the same sentence. The Palestinians are a people and therefore deserve a state. The Jews are a people, and therefore should not be allowed to have a state."

He concluded his address by stressing the need for education on tolerance, saying, "It is our moral duty to educate our children about anti-Semitism and the evils of senseless hatred."

Benjamin Weinthal contributed to this report

Monday, December 7, 2009

Israel must do right by its Sudanese refugees..

The following article is reprinted in full from the Jerusalem Post on December 7, 2009. It was written by SIMON DENG. For more information about the author of this article please see the last paragraph of the JPost article. Thank you.

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There are 2,500 people in Israel just like me - Christians from Southern Sudan who were persecuted brutally by the Khartoum government and who have always loved and admired the Jewish state. The Christians of Southern Sudan and the people of Israel share a great deal in common - religious heritage, a long memory of oppression, and the enmity of the worst regimes in the Middle East and Africa.

Sudanese refugees in Israel. ...


Sudanese refugees in Israel. ...

Sudanese refugees in Israel. "Egypt owes as much to them as we do."
Photo: Ariel Jerozolimski

As a former child slave in Southern Sudan who now fights for two interrelated causes - the State of Israel and the abolition of slavery in the Muslim world - I want to tell the people of this country about my countrymen who are seeking refuge here.

They are not a threat to you; on the contrary, they are lovers of Zion and natural allies of the Jewish state. What's more, they are ready to be a bridge between this country and the independent nation of Southern Sudan that is waiting to be born a little over a year from now.

Thus, there are two reasons why Israel needs to do right by the refugees from Southern Sudan - for their sake and for the sake of Israel itself.

Currently some 6,000 Sudanese refugees reside in this country. About 3,500 of them are Muslims - the majority from Darfur. A significant percentage of the Darfur refugees have been given temporary political asylum. If Israel does not grant the 2,500 Southern Sudanese Christians similar protection, or special dispensation, and they are forced to return to Sudan anytime in the near future, they will face execution or long imprisonment. According to Sudanese law, the fact that they have set foot in Israel - loathed byKhartoum as the ultimate enemy - makes their "offense" extremely grave.

Yet after almost three years in this country, they remain in limbo - without asylum, without knowing if and when they may be sent out of the country, without knowing what the future holds. For now they possess three-month "conditional visas," which keeps them in a state of uncertainty; to give a minimal measure of stability to their lives, it is essential to extend these visas for six to 12 months.

THESE CHRISTIANS fled to Israel through Egypt in order to escape forced Islamization and possible enslavement. Crimes against humanity have a long history in Sudan; a little-known fact is that the number of Christian Sudanese victims of these enormities far exceeds that of the victims in Darfur. Between 1955 and 1972, the Muslim regime inKhartoum slaughtered nearly 1.5 million Southern Sudanese Christians. Between 1983 and 2005, 2 million more met the same fate. Another 100,000 (a conservative estimate) were enslaved in the north, and seven million were made refugees.

The government of Khartoum has long singled out Southern Sudanese Christians and accused them of being traitors, even agents of Israel. The regime regards this as the worst possible crime. However, this accusation is a source of stubborn pride to the Southern Sudanese who love Israel, who identify with Israel - and there are many who dream of visiting the Holy Land as pilgrims and tourists.

But again, protecting the Christian Southern Sudanese refugees is also in the enlightened self-interest of the State of Israel. In 2011 the Southern Sudanese will vote whether or not to remain as "one Sudan" united with the north or to secede and become a separate country. If the Christian Southern Sudanese vote for secession - a virtual certainty - they will have their own nation as a free people for the first time in history.

I know these people well. I know their leaders. I feel confident that a free Southern Sudan will be a strong ally of the State of Israel.

This alliance would reflect a regional catharsis. The 2,500 Christians from Southern Sudan now residing in Israel could be the link between Israel and this new Christian nation - a pillar of a new, friendly, mutually beneficial relationship, a beacon for the future.

Thus, I urge the people of Israel and their leaders to help resolve the Southern Sudanese refugees' situation, end their legal limbo and give them the tools they need to be productive - either in their adopted home or in their new state that will be born very soon.

The writer, who escaped child slavery in Southern Sudan and now lives in New York, speaks on behalf of Southern Sudanese victims at synagogues, yeshivot and evangelical churches across the US. In 2006 he was honored for his anti-slavery activism at the Anti-Defamation League's annual Concert Against Hate in Washington's Kennedy Center.

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The Hope For Israel Relief Fund is committed to working for the improvement of immigrants throughout all of Israel. Some of the country's poorest population are immigrants from Africa. Join with us at The Hope For Israel Relief Fund to see how you can help out today! Your donations go to Messianic Jewish Ministries that support various relief works throughout the land. Donate to end poverty. Donate to see the Truth of God's character proclaimed in the land.

Blessings and Peace,

The Hope For Israel Relief Fund

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Battered women's hot line may close..

The following article was published in the Jerusalem Post on November 24, 2009. It was written by RUTH EGLASH and is published in its entirety below.

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As the world prepares to mark the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women on Wednesday, the future of Israel's National Hot Line for Battered Women and Children at Risk is in doubt, The Jerusalem Post has learned.

According to representatives of the Women's International Zionist Organization (WIZO), which currently runs the hot line together with the Welfare and Social Services Ministry, the emergency telephone service that provides private counseling and practical advice to battered women and children will soon be combined into a general national hot line for all matters connected to social welfare.

"A woman who has finally found the courage, after years of suffering, to call someone for help does not really want to be held in a telephone line until their call is answered by an operator," wrote Yochi Feller, director of WIZO Israel, in a letter to Welfare and Social Services Minister Isaac Herzog last week.

"Victims of domestic violence, including children and teens at risk, are a particularly weak population, and they need personal and immediate assistance," she stressed.

However, a spokesman for the ministry told the Post Monday that the idea was to bring together all the currently available help lines under one number (118), similar to what is provided by the police or medical services.

"We have nothing against WIZO, and we work with them on many different projects. We just believe that it will be easier for the public to deal with one main number," he said, explaining that the ministry had already put out tenders for operating the service and that it would provide professional training to those manning the phones.

"There will be staff, including social workers, who will be able to help the callers on most subjects, and there will be no waiting time for calls," he added, noting that the ministry was looking to utilize state-of-the-art technology for the service.

However, Nurit Kaufman, who is director of the Violence against Women department at WIZO and has been working in the field for some 25 years, said she felt strongly that victims of domestic violence needed to be treated separately.

"If these women do not feel they will get the full attention and a sympathetic ear, then they will simply not call," she said, reiterating Feller's remarks.

Kaufman noted that WIZO had been the first women's organization to set up a hot line for battered women in 1987 and had been running the line (1-800-220-000) together with the ministry since 2005.

"We do hope to continue with our hot line, but it really depends on whether we find funding for it or not," she said.

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The Hope For Israel Relief Fund is committed to standing with victimized women and helping them overcome any and all circumstances. We support several ministries that seek to empower and raise up women by providing for their physical and spiritual needs. If you feel that God is putting Israeli women on your heart please contact us at http://www.thehopeforisrael.org today to see how you can join with us in helping women. We look forward to hearing from you!

Monday, November 23, 2009

The Sweetness of Giving

This article first appeared in TOGETHER: Jewish Giving Today, published by The Jewish Federations of North America. Below it is reprinted.

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The Sweetness of Giving
by Ruth Andrew Ellenson

When I was little, my father would begin every Shabbat by having each person in my family donate money to the bright blue and white tzedakah box we kept in our dining room. We would collect coins and deposit them into the little metal slot one by one, listening to each one drop with a satisfying metal clink.

I wish I could say that I was pious enough as a child to have truly enjoyed this act of charity – this small bit of tikkun olam foisted upon me in a valiant attempt to form my good character. But I did not. Instead, with each dropping coin, I lamented in my heart the money that was going to strangers instead of my candy supply. With each quarter that vanished into the void, visions of chocolate, sugar and other tasty treats filled my head with longing and despair.

It’s tough to want things and have to give away what you have. As a kid, sugar was my idea of perfect happiness (and really, has that changed?) and it was being forced out of my hands to help people I didn’t even know.

Our whole society is geared towards acquisition. The idea of owning that one thing that will bring us perfect happiness – be it candy when you’re six, or a car when you’re 60 – is something we are programmed for from birth. The idea that material things can bring satisfaction is a fantasy that’s hard to let go.

And yet sooner or later (hopefully sooner) we learn the lesson that getting everything you want, and keeping everything you have, doesn’t really make you happy. You realize that wealth really has no meaning unless you go out into the world and share it with others.

As an adult, I’m grateful for the lesson my dad taught us at the Shabbat table. Now when I give tzedakah, I get so much more satisfaction than I ever did from my candy supply – even chocolate doesn’t compare with the sweetness of giving.

Ruth Andrew Ellenson won the National Jewish Book Award for her anthology “The Modern Jewish Girl’s Guide to Guilt” and lectures regularly on Jewish women’s identity issues. Learn more at www.guiltguide.com.

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When we give with joy in our hearts the Lord honors our offerings. In this season, if you are looking for ministries to joyfully support, please consider The Hope For Israel Relief Fund. Working with the Messianic Jewish community in Israel we are able to provide for several worthy ministries. For more information please visit our website: http://www.thehopeforisrael.org.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

What they need is love: 40 kids seek foster homes

The below article was originally written and published for the Jerusalem Post's online publications by RON FRIEDMAN on November 20, 2009.

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Two-year-old Guy suffers from slight development retardation due to long-term neglect and severe malnutrition. Guy was removed from his home by welfare services six months ago because his parents could not provide him or his two brothers with a worthy environment. Today, Guy is one of 40 children in desperate need of a foster home.

Two-year-old Guy is looking...

Two-year-old Guy is looking for a foster family.
Photo: Courtesy of Orr Shalom

November 20 is the Universal Day of the Child and Orr Shalom, a non-government organization that provides residential and therapeutic services to children who have been removed from their homes, is calling on members of the public to volunteer their homes and their hearts and consider becoming foster parents for Guy or any of the other children who need a warm environment to grow up in.

Orr Shalom was founded in 1980 and today is the largest organization that deals with foster families, caring for more than 1,300 children from ages 0-18, through a variety of different programs. Working out of offices in Beit Shemesh, Orr Shalom helps children across the country and from all backgrounds.

For the last six months since being removed from his parent's house, Guy has been living in an emergency foster home - a home that is prepared to accept a child at a moment's notice. Children are only removed from their homes as a last resort, usually following a sustained period of abuse or neglect, once all other options have been exhausted, or when a child's life is in immediate danger.

"Many people know about the case that has come to be known as the 'starving mother case,' but all of the 40 children we're looking for homes for are many times worse than that," said Orr Shalom's Erik Rosental. "For us the ground is always burning - we are always in emergency mode."

While Guy has blossomed in the emergency foster home, putting on weight and opening up to people, he is in need of a more permanent home and the emergency foster home needs his spot for other needy children coming in. Children are only meant to stay there for around three months.

Guy never experienced love and warmth before arriving at the emergency foster home. His drug-addicted parents neglected him completely and he lived devoid of attention, human contact and even speech for the first year and a half of his life. Since arriving at the emergency foster home he has become hungry for affection and attaches himself to anyone who is friendly towards him. Nearly every evening, before going to sleep, he is overcome by a burst of laughter that only strengthens once he hears the words "good night."

Sometimes he reverts to reclusive behavior, backing up to walls and avoiding contact, but it passes quickly. Guy loves listening to noises. He is transfixed by human speech and often begins dancing in place when music is played.

Orr Shalom caregivers say that Guy has the potential for normal development and that loving care will do wonders for his cognitive development. What he needs is a warm and loving family that will take him in and invest in his care and upbringing.

Unlike adoption, foster care is designed to be a temporary solution for children-at-risk until their biological parents are able to care for them properly or until a decision is reached about a permanent home for the child, though in some cases the children remain with their foster families until they are grown up.

Anat Dunowicz, executive director of Orr Shalom, explains that in recent years changes in Welfare Ministry policies have seen a shift towards preferring foster home solutions instead of caring for the children in special institutions or sending them to boarding schools.

"Over the last three years we have seen a rise from 15 percent to 23% of children going into foster homes," said Dunowicz. "In other Western countries foster homes are the solution for 85% of the children."

Chantal
Hakmon is a mother to six biological children and two foster children. She and her husband Raphael, have been taking care of 10-year-old Eli for three years and seven-year-old Tali for a year and a half. Hakmon said she would recommend the experience to anybody willing to try, but that it came with many unforeseen challenges.

"We raised six children of our own and made sure to seek guidance all along the way, so we thought we knew our stuff when it came to parenting, but with foster children you can never really be fully prepared. The harsh conditions the children grow in leave their marks and their behavior can be very different from children, like ours, who grew up in a warm family environment," said Hakmon.

As an example, she spoke of how her foster child Eli reacted to the birth of kittens to the family cat. "When the cat gave birth in the yard, Eli tried to approach the kittens and care for them. I told him not to touch them because I was afraid that if he did the mother would no longer nurse them. When the social worker came to visit, he explained that Eli's reaction was quite understandable.

"Eli had been forced to take care of his two younger sisters because their mother wasn't home. He simply had no grasp of the natural connection between the mother and her kittens. When I explained to him that he didn't have to take care of the little ones, that the mother would provide for all their needs, he was ready to let go," related Hakmon.

Hakmon said she was sometimes frustrated by the fact that Eli appeared to be a regular 10-year-old, but that developmentally he was sometimes still a baby. "He talks and moves around like a normal boy, but he often reacts to things like a much younger child," she said.

One of the things she always needs to remind herself and the rest of the family is that the foster children are only with them temporarily and that the real hope is for their biological parents to one day get them back, she said. For that purpose, the children remain in contact with their biological parents and the families meet and talk on the phone on a regular basis.

Hakmon said that families that open their homes to foster children have to be solidly united. "It is important that the parents' relationship be strong and that the biological children should be supportive."

She said her own children, ranging in ages from eight to 28, were all on board with the decision and that they got along well with the foster children. "I guess we did some things right in raising them because they are very understanding and have a great desire to give," said Hakmon.

When asked if she would consider taking in any other foster children, Hakmon said that she would if she could. "I hope to retire soon and we have a big house - we hope to fill it up with foster children after our biological kids leave home."

Dunowicz said that the criteria for foster parenting were decided by the Ministry of Welfare and included factors like a reasonable economic situation, good health, enough room to support a child, lack of a criminal record and willingness to work with the welfare authorities and the biological parents of the children.

Foster families receive a state stipend to help with the cost of clothes, food and school supplies and Orr Shalom provides money for extras like after-school activities and toys from funds raised by donors.

Dunowicz said that one of the biggest challenges was finding homes for two or more siblings. The preference of the welfare services and of Orr Shalom are that brothers and sisters remain together so that they can hold on to familial bonds and be better prepared for their eventual return to their biological home. "If people are hesitant to take one child, they are even more hesitant to take two or more," said Dunowicz.

"The Welfare Ministry invests NIS 65 million a year to assist and support foster families. Foster families' willingness to volunteer is unparalleled," said WelfareMinistry director general Nachum Itskovitch. "Fostering doesn't only provide professional and therapeutic care for the children who need it, but it also provides a social and moral example that is second to none in Israeli society," he added. "The WelfareMinistry sees the adoption of these values as an indivisible part of its role and we plan to strengthen the support of foster families in the future."

Orr Shalom calls on anyone who is interested in fostering Guy or any one of the other 40 children in need of warm homes to contact it at
(02) 993-6900 ext. 125 or visit its Web site www.orr-shalom.org.il to learn more about ways to help.

All children's names have been changed in the article to protect their identity.

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Here at The Hope For Israel Relief Fund we are asking that you pray with us
on this Universal Day of the Child. We are committed to those most vulnerable in Israel. Let us pray that God's favor would shine on the Messianic ministries that are helping the poor all over Israel. The Messianic community within Israel is dedicated to providing for the poor and we encourage you to pray for all of their needs. Make sure every dollar you send to bless Israel ends up in the hands of those who are 100% committed to the causes you are trying to support. For more information please click below to see how you can help through The Hope For Israel Relief Fund. Donate Today!

The Hope For Israel Relief Fund would also like to take this time to stand with organizations like Orr Shalom on the Universal Day of the Child and remind readers that we are supporting several ministries that seek to provide for poverty-stricken children and families. If you'd like to learn more about how we are helping out in the Land please visit http://www.thehopeforisrael.org today!

Blessings,
The Hope For Israel

Monday, November 16, 2009

Survey: 46% of Israelis fear falling below poverty level

The below article was written by RUTH EGLASH of the Jerusalem Post (www.jpost.com) it appeared on November 16, 2009 in their online publications.

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Close to half of Israeli's population lives in constant fear that the government's economic policies will force them into a life of extreme poverty, according to a study published Monday to coincide with the International Day for the Eradication of Poverty.

A man searches through the...

A man searches through the garbage in Jerusalem's Mahane Yehuda open-air market.
Photo: Ariel Jerozolimski via JPost.com

The day was marked worldwide on October 17, but will take place here among non-profit organizations on Tuesday.

Using a sample of some 500 Israeli adults, the survey, which was conducted by the Forum for the International Day for the Eradication of Poverty, found that 46 percent of the those polled were in a perpetual state of fear that government policy would cause them to fall below the poverty line. Only a quarter of those questioned for the telephone survey said they felt financially secure in their current situation.

"We deal with this kind of fear every day," commented B., a working mother of five who asked that her real name be withheld. "Both my husband and I work full-time, but we have no outside help and no assistance from the government. We are constantly struggling to make ends meet."

B., who lives in Jerusalem and whose husband works in hi-tech, added, "We live a simple life, and we don't waste money. We have no car and no television, but we still spend more than half of our income on rent. The situation is absurd."

The family will be among those presenting their personal stories Tuesday at a special conference for lawmakers in the Knesset, organized by the Forum for the International Day for the Eradication of Poverty.

"The situation will only change if we are able to put a face on poverty," said Jona Rosenfeld, professor emeritus from the School of Social Work at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and from the Unit of Learning from His Success and On-going Learning in Human Services at the JDC-Myers Brookdale Institute. "Studies and surveys will not bring change. Most of these people living in poverty or fear of poverty are anonymous; they do not have voices, and there is no discourse."

Several of the key Knesset committees will focus on poverty during their sessions on Tuesday.

In addition to the financial fears faced by most of the population, the survey found that roughly a quarter (24%) of those questioned admitted they'd had to make serious cutbacks to their budget this year and prioritize food and medicine in their expenses.

While recognizing that this fear derived from the present global economic crisis some 77% of those questioned said they believed that the fall into poverty was not solely the fault of the individuals, and only 19% said it was the individuals' responsibility to get themselves out of financial difficulties.

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Issues of poverty and an onslaught of helplessness continue to plague the most vulnerable in Israel. While many fear the changes that they'll face if the economic crisis worsens there are those that are hurting now. The Physical and Spiritual crises in Israel is not too big for what God has planned for this great country. Let us pray that all of Israel would come to know their true Provider, the One who will never let them down or let their needs go without being fulfilled.

If you would like to know how you can get involved please visit http://www.thehopeforisrael.org and to donate today please visit http://www.thehopeforisrael.org/donate.html

Blessings and Shalom,
The Hope For Israel Relief Fund

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Less than 0.05% of Ethiopians live in Tel Aviv

The below article is being reprinted from the Jerusalem Post, written by Staff writers there.

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In honor of the Sigd holiday, celebrated by Ethiopian Jews to commemorate their acceptance of the Torah, the Central Bureau of Statistics published data about the Ethiopian community in Israel on Sunday.

Jewish Ethiopian children in...

Jewish Ethiopian children in Gondar, Ethiopoia.
Photo: Courtesy of Dr. Arthur Eidelman

According to statistics, most of Israel's 119,000 Ethiopians live in the central and southern parts of the country, especially in urban areas in which Jews constitute less than one-third of the population. Less than 0.05% of the community resides in Tel Aviv-Yafo.

Statistics were also compiled concerning education in the Israeli Ethiopian community, showing that the rate of those eligible for high school matriculation certificates has risen by six percent in the last ten years - thus reducing the gap between Ethiopian and native Israeli students, whose matriculation eligibility rate stood at 55% in 2008.

The dropout rate, however, was found to be lower among Israeli Ethiopian students than among their native Israeli counterparts - 1.54% and 1.78%, respectively.

Of the Ethiopian Jews living in Israel today, 19.3% of them made aliya before 1989's Operation Moses, 46.5% of them made aliya during Operation Solomon in the previous decade and 34.2% made aliya between 2000 and 2008.

The bureau's report showed that a very high percentage of Ethiopians in Israel marry into their community, men more so than women - 93% and 85%, respectively, averaging out at 89%. The percentage of divorced Israeli Ethiopian couples proved to be only slightly higher than the divorce rate in the general population.

In 2008, concluded the report, 2,183 babies were born in Israel to women of Ethiopian origin.

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Ethiopians living in Israel are among the most vulnerable members of society. The Hope For Israel Relief Fund seeks to reach out to this community by supporting them in various humanitarian needs. If you are thinking about donating to Israel to support the Ethiopian population we would ask that you consider using The Hope For Israel Relief Fund, so that you can be sure that your money is being used to support ministries that are owned and operated by the believing community in Israel.

For more information on how you can help please visit http://www.thehopeforisrael.org/donate